Standing upright for creation

Professor Richard Porter’s experience qualifies him as a world authority on
the human spine. He marvels at the incredible design in our bodies and testifies
to the hand of our Creator evident in Creation.

Richard Porter was Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at the University of Aberdeen,
Scotland, from 1990–95 (in universities in the UK and many British Commonwealth
countries, the title ‘Professor’ is given only to the highest rank of
university lecturers).

Then he was Director of Education and Training for the Royal College of Surgeons
of Edinburgh from 1995–97.

He has published over 120 papers in peer-reviewed journals (50% on spinal disorders),
mostly as senior author. He is the author of five textbooks and over 30 contributory
chapters. In 2001 Edinburgh University awarded him a D.Sc. degree for research
on spinal stenosis, and he was awarded the Syme professorship for work on congenital
talipes (formerly called ‘club foot’). Retired for the last five
years, he still continues with research and writing.

[Update: we were sorry to learn that Professor Porter died on 20 July 2005, aged 70. His obituary in the British Medical Journal noted both his extensive contributions to spinal research, including scoliosis, osteoporosis and club feet, his medical inventions, TV documentaries about him, and sponsoring overseas doctors. It also pointed out his strong Christian faith, and his strong support for hundreds of Iranian and Afghan asylum seekers, many of whom he helped lead to Christ.]

Christian commitment

Most important to Prof. Porter, however, is his Christian faith, as he explains:

‘My own spiritual journey began when my mother and father shared with me the
way to find a simple close relationship with the Lord. At 11 years of age,
I accepted Jesus personally—life’s most important choice—and I
have never been disappointed. My main objective is to encourage others to
know Jesus, and experience the new life of the indwelling Holy Spirit—that
is, the New Birth.

‘Because of the amazing miracle of God coming to us in Jesus—miraculously
conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary—and rising from the
dead (which doesn’t usually happen!)—the whole thinking of a Christian
is inevitably quite different from that of an unbeliever.’

Asked about the book of Genesis, Prof. Porter replied, ‘It makes sense that
because we are children of a loving God, who has shown Himself in Jesus, then a
literal understanding of the early chapters of Genesis (that God chose to create
that way) is no problem. It was clearly the way Jesus read it (Matthew
19:3–6,
Mark 10:6–9).’

With his record of scientific papers and awards, Prof. Porter would have to smile
at those who claim that no creationist publishes in the scientific literature or
does real research. Some evolutionists, forced by such indisputable facts
to grudgingly admit that some creationists do real research, try the tack that such
creationists are really using evolutionary, not creationist, principles in their
research. On the contrary, Richard says, ‘It is just the opposite.
A person who begins with the premise that God has made an excellent design is at
an advantage—he is able to ask questions that the evolutionist never thought
about. The most important thing in research is to begin by asking the right
question.’

Back pain vs evolution

Richard pointed out that evolutionary theory can be unproductive for research:

‘For example, the curve of the lumbar spine towards the front—the lordosis—was
thought by evolutionists to be a problem, the result of man having recently adopted
an upright position. So, some researchers blamed back pain on this, saying
the spine had not yet evolved satisfactorily. If therapists have the wrong
starting assumption, then it’s not surprising that treatments for lordosis
are unhelpful. If a spine fracture causes a lumbar kyphosis (curvature in
the opposite direction), that spine is significantly weakened.’1

He added that the creationist perspective has always been foundational to his research:

‘I start from quite a different position. From my understanding of human
anatomy and physiology and my understanding of God, I say that the form of God’s
creation always matches its function. So you can be sure that the form of
the spine is perfectly designed for its function. God has made a wonderful
spine. If you start with that premise, it gives you a head start when trying
to understand the mechanism of the spine.

‘When you start to examine the biomechanics of the curved spine, asking why
it’s that shape, and what’s good about it, you find that the arch of
the spine has a beautiful purpose. Like the arch of a bridge, it adds strength.
Because of that arch in the lumbar spine, a person with a lumbar lordosis can lift
proportionally more weight than a gorilla with its kyphotic (opposite curvature)
spine! So it’s not surprising that treating back pain with postures
and exercises that restore the lordosis works exceedingly well.’2

The splendid spine

Injury Statistics
Our human spine is among the most ingeniously designed structures to be found anywhere.
In this fallen world, it is estimated that 70–90% of all people in the US
will suffer at least one back injury in their lives. Up to 25% become chronic.
Much of this is exacerbated by failure to keep the surrounding muscles strong.

Since the spine is his specialist field, he could tell us about more of its amazing
features:

‘My inaugural lecture in Aberdeen was “Upright Man”? and I tried
to explain how the wonderful human spine is a perfect match between form and function.
Things go wrong with the spine when we abuse it (if we fail to keep ourselves fit,
or overload it, or have an accident). We are learning to use “foam filling”?
in building (a sandwich of honeycomb material between two plates) to make something
that is both light and strong, but the bones of the spine have been “foam
filled”? with cancellous bone (with an open, latticed, or porous structure),
surrounded by harder cortical bone, since the Creation.

‘The vertebral bodies increase in cross-sectional area as you go further down
the spine, because in the upright position, the lower ones take more load.
The bones are not denser, just bigger. By contrast, animals that walk on all
fours have a roughly horizontal spine that is equally loaded all the way.
So all their vertebrae are of similar cross-sectional area. Form matches function.
If evolutionists were right in saying we had recently attained upright posture,
our vertebral bodies should be like those of quadrupeds, but they are not.

‘We designed radial-ply tyres for motor cars, but God constructed the rim
of the intervertebral disc with radial-ply fibres from the beginning.3 That
construction makes a healthy disc stronger than the bones. When one examines
the way the human body is formed and how it works, one is constantly amazed.
It’s like looking at a piece of beautiful bone china and seeing the maker’s
mark beneath.’4

More creationist contributions to medicine

The contributions of modern creationists to scientific research are well-kept secrets
by the modern media and scientific establishment, but Prof. Porter is not the only
one. He talks about a leading pathologist:

‘Denis Burkitt (1911–1993) was a good friend with an enquiring mind. In Africa,
as a missionary surgeon, he constantly asked questions, and noticed a lymphoma [a
type of cancer] localized to certain parts of Central and East Africa. With
only a £50 grant, he visited many mission hospitals and mapped the geographic
location of the disease. He then correctly deduced that the tumor was caused
by a mosquito-borne virus. This tumor, the first recognized as having a viral
origin, is now known as Burkitt’s Lymphoma.

‘Denis also won world acclaim for observing links between many killer diseases
of the Western world and lack of fibre in our diet. He was responsible, more
than anyone else, for Westerners turning to a high fibre diet. He was also
a great man of God who took the Bible at face value. He believed that God
has spoken the truth in Genesis.’

The ‘age’ question

We find that an increasing number of Christians are rejecting biological evolution
in favor of direct creation, but some still balk at taking the timescale literally.
Prof. Porter counsels:

‘We can look at cosmic and biological science and say perhaps that sometimes
the observations don’t seem to fit Genesis, but wait a bit—there
are lots of suppositions. Keep thinking, and you can be confident that eventually
science will show God did it the way He said He did.

‘Different scientists may examine the same facts about biology, geology or
cosmology but reach quite different conclusions. The evolutionist will reach
one view probably because he never thinks about, or rejects, a young Earth.

‘I’m greatly encouraged that an increasing number of scientists seem
to be accepting a straightforward reading of Genesis. Even though the number
actually carrying out research in that framework is small, it is exciting to see
the number of insights that have arisen, and models that have been developed that
seem to show how the facts fit Genesis exceedingly well. So even though there
is a long way to go, the creationist is asking the right question and keeps thinking.
Whereas the evolutionist stops asking the right question, so in the search for truth
it is the creationist who is likely to come up with the right answers.

‘Many of the discrepancies between evolutionists and creationists revolve
around our concept of time. My hunch is we are going to find that there is
more than one timeframe. The issue is not ultimately the observations of the
Earth sciences, but the conclusions the evolutionists have drawn from them.’5

Advice for students

When he was a professor in Aberdeen, Richard led what colleagues said was a highly
productive research unit, and he enjoyed helping to train young surgeons.
He says:

‘We need lots of young people who love the Lord to make a career in science,
including biological science. They will discover that God’s thoughts,
which match His revealed Word, are written into creation. For too long I think
Darwinism has undermined confidence in God’s Word—the good news of His
eternal salvation, which is available to everyone who turns to Him in Christ.’

Family life

Professor Porter’s family is very important to him. He and his wife
Christine have four adult sons and nine little grandchildren [update: 11 by the time of his death]. The eldest son
is a Senior Lecturer in Orthopaedics, the second a Methodist minister with a heart
for revival, the third an Anglican vicar in a growing church, and the fourth is
a doctor, now in training for the Anglican ministry. Prof. Porter says:

‘My wife and I are just so thrilled that our sons, whether doctors or preachers
of the Gospel, share in the one ministry. The main thing for us all is to
be serving God wherever we are.’

References and notes

Smail, R., Oh my aching back!,
Creation12(4):20–21, September 1990. New
Zealand physiotherapist Robin McKenzie discovered this lordosis-restoring treatment
by chance in 1956. While not a creationist, McKenzie’s work lends considerable
support to creation. Return to text.

Editors: actually, the arrangement of the fibres in the disk rim, the Annulus Fibrosis, is like a cross-ply or bias-ply tyre, as can be seen from Vertebral column flashcards. That is, successive layers have fibre directions at an angle to each other. Older tyres were made this way. Michelin introduced radial tyres commercially in 1946, where the main reinforcing fibres are 90° to the direction of travel. This means that the sidewall flex is not transmitted to the tread, while cross-ply tyres undergo friction between the layers. So radial tyres are more fuel efficient, are easier to steer, and last longer. But the one advantage of cross-ply tyres, relevant for spinal construction, is that they can hold greater loads than radial tyres of the same size or weight. See A Tale of Two Tires. Return to text.

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